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CHICAGO, Ill. (Jan. 21, 2015) - Tucker Development, a leading fund manager and developer of shopping centers and mixed-use properties, today announced that it has hired Aaron M. Tucker to serve as vice president and general counsel. In his new role, Tucker is responsible for business development, including sourcing capital and structuring deals, as well as all legal matters involving Tucker Development and its affiliates. Prior to joining Tucker Development, Tucker held positions with Kirkland & Ellis LLP and Paul Hastings LLP. At both firms, Tucker focused his practice on commercial real estate including development, finance and leasing matters relating to complex real estate...

Related "United States Holocaust Memorial Museum" Articles

CHICAGO, Ill. (Jan. 21, 2015) - Tucker Development, a leading fund manager and developer of shopping centers and mixed-use properties, today announced that it has hired Aaron M. Tucker to serve as vice president and general counsel.
In his new role,...

The exhibit on race at the Holocaust Museum in Skokie tackles the topic from biological, cultural and historical points of view, but it's something Evanston resident Ann Stewart said she lives every day.
"I think it's hard to be a black person in...

Highland Park resident Steve Keller has many questions he'd like to ask his late father, Robert Keller, one of 50 Jewish children who were brought from Austria to America in 1939 as Nazi Germany was ratcheting up the evil apparatus that soon would...

During the darkest days of World War II, when much of Europe was under Nazi domination, Jews on the continent were imperiled: rounded up and murdered in concentration camps, under siege elsewhere, or on the run.
In the Italian village of Anghiari,...

As the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, Cantor Andrea Rae Markowicz had a personal stake in spending a recent Monday evening glimpsing ominous diary passages penned by a close confidant of Adolf Hitler.
"This is part of my family's narrative,...

"Hélène Berr, A Stolen Life," a special exhibit from the Mémorial de la Shoah in Paris, France, will be on display at the Highland Park Public Library from September 8-October 20. The exhibit, created and designed by the...

Musician Stevie Wonder and actress Cloris Leachman were among those who received honorary degrees from Northwestern University this morning.
Joining them was Chicago Symphony Orchestra Music Director Riccardo Muti, who also gave the keynote address...

Like a set of Russian nesting dolls, Ayelet Waldman's historically resonant new novel offers stories within stories, spanning a century of European wars and social movements, (mostly) ill-starred relationships, and the ambiguous aftermath of these...

Under Nazi ideology, German women were supposed to be prodigies of child-bearing and domesticity, leaving the wider world of work — not to mention violence and mass murder — to men.
This piece first ran in Printers Row Journal, delivered to...

Once again this year, the fall museum and zoo schedules are full, and not just because of the now-requisite Halloween and Christmas programming. Highlights include a World's Fair revisitation at the Field, commemoration of the Gettysburg Address' 150th...

In observance of Black History Month, students at Olivet Nazarene University are learning about, celebrating and discussing the achievements of important people and events in African-American history. Sponsored by the Center for Student Success, campus...

A tranquil spot on the Cooper River in Charleston is a place of memory, much like New York's Ellis Island or Angel Island in San Francisco. But those islands were beacons for millions who sought a better life in America. Gadsden's Wharf which once stood...

A foundation based in Indianapolis has committed $20 million as an endowment gift for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum to fund work in preventing genocide. The museum announced the gift Thursday from the Samerian Foundation and its founders, Cynthia...

Rochus Misch never expressed regret over his wartime service or doubts about the man he and his comrades called "the boss."
Misch was Adolf Hitler's bodyguard, messenger and telephone operator. He had tea and cookies with Hitler's sister in...

The 10 books on the National Book Awards' longlist for the nonfiction prize include works by some of the nation’s best-known historians, a memoir about a childhood in the shadow of the CIA and bestselling books about America’s economic decline and the...

Jack Tramiel, the tough and aggressive Commodore International founder who brought millions of people into the world of personal computers in the late 1970s and early '80s with his low-cost PCs, has died. He was 83.
Tramiel, who lived in Monte Sereno,...

Harry Eisen, a Polish-born Holocaust survivor who founded Norco Ranch Inc. in western Riverside County in the 1950s and built it into one of the state's leading egg producers, processors and distributors, has died. He was 95.
Eisen died July 19 of...

Corporate turnaround expert Sanford C. Sigoloff, credited with leading ailing companies such as Wickes Cos. out of bankruptcy but criticized by many as a tough-as-nails boss, has died. He was 80.
Sigoloff died of complications from pneumonia Saturday...